The funeral of Dolours Price on Monday was a seminal event for Irish
republicans as they paid their last respects to an IRA heroine.

The family had requested a private family funeral, and those wishes
were respected. Despite this, up to a thousand people gathered on the
Anderstonstown Road, Belfast, as the funeral cortege made its way
through driving rain to Milltown cemetery, her coffin draped in the
Irish tricolour.

Senior republicans and nationalists of all hues were in attendance,
including former MP Bernadette McAliskey, Patron of Republican Sinn
Féin Ruairi O Bradaigh, and éirígí general secretary Breandan
MacCionnaith. Black flags had been erected on lampposts across west
Belfast in a final tribute.

Sinn Féin president Gerry Adams symphatised with the Price-Rea family
but did not attend the funeral, following his public disagreements with
the Price sisters in recent years.

“For her sons Oscar and Danny there is nothing worse than losing your
mother so his sisters, her brother, friends I want to also extend
condolences,” he said.

“Dolours did make certain allegations [about me]. I have denied them
and my sense of her passing is one of loss and also of a sense of
solidarity with her family.”

Sinn Féin’s West Belfast MP Paul Maskey and the party’s junior minister
Jennifer McCann were among the crowds who lined the Andersonstown Road,
along with former publicity director Danny Morrison, but did not attend
the service.

Mgr Raymond Murray, chaplain for 19 years at Armagh women’s prison
where the Price sisters were repatriated after more than 200 days on
hunger strike in England during which they were force fed, said Dolours
“had been ill for years”.

“I visited her in hospital in Dublin a few months ago but was still
shocked by her sudden death.”

In his homily, Father Murray told mourners that Price and her sister
were like bosom twins.

He said: “Dolours’ family can relate her nature and her talent, both of
which is outside the knowledge and understanding of those who did not
know her personally.

“She was clever and witty, full of fun and held people enthralled by
her conversation.

“She was very devoted to her parents. Her mother, Chrissie, died on
February 1, 1975.

“Their mother never saw Dolours or Marian back in Ireland. They did not
get compassionate leave from prison in England to attend her funeral.

“A week afterwards they were repatriated to Ireland but that grief of
not seeing her mother meant she never found closure.”

That grief of being unable to mourn was revisited on the Price family
when Marian was refused permission to attend the funeral last Friday.

That decision provoked a furious reaction among republicans,
particularly in west Belfast where the memories of the Price sisters’
suffering on hunger strike is still fresh.

But a titanic battle against the extraordinary cruelty of the Parole
Commission ensured that Marian was allowed the small compromise of
attending her sister’s wake for three hours.

Ruairi O Bradaigh, who attended the funeral, expressed sympathy to her
sisters Marian and Clare and to her two sons, Danny and Oscar.

The former RSF President said the untimely passing of Dolours Price was
“a moment in Republican history”, and paid tribute to her life of
struggle on behalf of the republican cause.

In recent years, he said Dolours had opposed “deceit, hypocrisy and
public lying in high places” and “exposed it relentlessly”. He said he
had rejected what she saw as a surrender process from the outset.

“She saw all that as a contradiction to the mountain of sacrifice that
had been made over the decades. She herself had contributed more than
her share and she was outraged at the developments,” he added.

The post-traumatic stress disorder which Dolours suffered from after
decades of IRA actions, including the extended, brutal force-feeding
she endured at the hands of English prison guards, were referred to at
her graveside.

But Socialist Eamonn McCann said Dolours was soft-hearted at her core.

“Sometimes in war atrocious things are done; sometimes hard things have
to be done,” he said.

“Sometimes it is very difficult to handle the hard things that you felt
compelled to do when you are soft-hearted at the core of your being.
And Dolours was a soft-hearted person as well as a hard person in her
politics.”

Civil rights activist Bernadette McAliskey spoke of the hardship which
many had suffered through the conflict. She said: “We cannot keep
pretending that 40 years of cruel war, of loss, of sacrifice, of
prison, of inhumanity, has not affected each and every one of us in
heart and soul and spirit.

“We cannot keep pretending that the war did not hurt. It broke our
hearts and it broke our bodies, it changed our perspectives and it
makes every day hard.”

At a prior event, she said that the British state had “hounded” both
Dolours and Marian Price, and pointed to the extraordinary efforts made
by the Six-County Minister for Justice David Ford to prevent Marian’s
release for her sister’s funeral.

“Power still lies in the fist of the Northern Ireland Secretary of
State. But they have paper power,” she said.

“Marian Price remains in prison on the whim of the Secretary of State.

“Dolours Price cannot be harmed by this state anymore because they have
finally destroyed that good woman and she is now gone.”

* The full text of Ms McAliskey’s address to the Bloody Sunday
commemoration is included below

* The full text of Mgr Murray’s homily at the funeral service is
included below